
The Power of Her Voice: Music and Patriarchal Politics in Frances Burney's Cecilia
Author(s) -
Megan Grandmont
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
elements
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2380-6087
pISSN - 2378-0185
DOI - 10.6017/eurj.v6i2.9033
Subject(s) - patriarchy , saint , politics , musical , power (physics) , art , popular music , art history , sociology , literature , gender studies , law , physics , quantum mechanics , political science
Saint Cecilia is, to the Catholic Church, the patron saint of music. But to feminist musicologists Suan Cook and Judy Tsou, she is instead the "patronized" saint of music, a symbol of the limited role to which women have been traditionally confined in Western music. In her novel Cecilia, however, Frances Burney works to reclaim the figure of the female musician from the periphery of artistic relevance. Burney's music-loving protagonist Cecilia serves as a vehicle to explore a number of eighteenth-century concerns, most notably emerging class conflicts and the tension between a women's personal investment in art and the male, public world that devalues that art. Burney situates her heroine paradoxically both inside and apart from patriarchal society; it is Cecilia's music that allows her to stand on the brink. Burney certainly acknowledges the ways in which music functions as a tool of patriarchy, rendering women submissive. However, in re-visioning Saint Cecilia as simply Cecilia,, she also quietly suggests the possibility of change, a suggestion that holds weight for female artists today.